Sir Philip Watts, the beleaguered chairman of Royal Dutch/Shell Group of Cos, has resigned in the wake of a shareholders' revolt over the company's overstatement of its oil and gas reserves.
In a surprise announcement, Shell spokeswoman Bianca Ruakere said Wednesday that Watts' decision to leave was reached "by mutual consent." She refused to comment on whether his departure was connected to Shell's recent revelation that it had fewer reserves than it had been reporting.
PHOTO: AFP
Watts will be replaced by Jeroen van der Veer, the president of Royal Dutch Petroleum, Shell said in a statement.
The head of Shell's Exploration and Production business, Walter van de Vijver, also has stepped down, underscoring the importance of the reserves issue. Shell said he has been replaced by Malcolm Brinded, the new managing director of the Shell Transport and Trading Co PLC -- the British component of the Shell group.
Some shareholders had called for Watts to resign after Shell announced on Jan. 9 that it was downgrading 20 percent of its proved reserves and reclassifying them into unproved categories.
That announcement prompted the US Securities and Exchange Commission to launch a formal probe into the overstatement.
An SEC official in Washington said last month that a formal investigation means regulators have reason to believe laws may have been violated but added that the SEC has yet to reach any conclusions. The official spoke on condition of anonymity.
Shell spokesman Andy Corrigan said in February that he believed the SEC's decision to hold a formal inquiry was "fairly standard" and emphasized that it was not a criminal investigation. Shell would continue to cooperate fully with the SEC, he said.
Watts had antagonized shareholders for what they saw as his maladroit handling of the reserves issue. Some analysts saw him as quick to highlight positive developments, such as Shell's massive project for producing liquefied natural gas on Russia's Sakhalin Island, but slow and uncommunicative about less favorable news.
Many observers thought Watts, 58, had weathered the initial onslaught of investor anger and believed he would continue in his job until his retirement, said Keith Morris, an analyst at BNP Paribas.
However, investors kept up the pressure, and Watts appeared finally to give in to their demands that he step down.
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